Exhibition carte blanche at Laden N°5, Bad Ems, Germany

Kuenstlerhaus Schloss Balmoral presents:

Richard Deacon to Sunyoung Park, Sunday Carat Laden N° 5

Info

March 23rd – May 1st 2012 Richard Deacon will present Sunyoung Park personally at the opening on March 22nd 2012. Forecast: BALMORALE at Kuenstlerhaus Schloss Balmoral, Bad Ems, opening March 29th at 7.30 p.m., running from March 30th through April 1st 2012

Address

After a winter pause, Kuenstlerhaus Schloss Balmoral reopens the Laden No 5 in the centre of Bad Ems with its first carte blanche 2012 which was given to the renowned British artist Richard Deacon. He is presenting the young Korean artist Sunyoung Park. After studies in Seoul she pursued her studies at the Kunsthochschule Duesseldorf and also through longer sojourns in Paris.

Carte blanche is a format with which Balmoral wants to enhance the discourse between cultural players of different generations, inviting well-known artists to present younger ones and draw the attention of press and public on emerging artists. It is complementing its residency programme and interplaying with its scholars.

Sunday Car: What Car?by Richard DeaconThe first works Sunyoung Park showed me were photographs of things seen or placed on the street. What she seemed to be looking for - and to find - was an empty space that had become occupied. One of the intriguing things was that it was impossible to tell which were the things she had just come across and which were the things she had placed or manipulated, the photographs contrived to be both documents and works at the same time, both fiction and fact. At more or less the same time she was also working on a range of sculptures based around the manipulation of found or purchased objects. Thinking back, all of these - using rubber boots, doors, windows, radios, telephones, clocks etc., - incorporate objects where both distance and communication or passage and a kind of absent partner are somehow implicated. Sunyoung then took herself off to Paris, where she spent hours - and days - circling the streets of every arrondissement, looking and taking photographs. At first these take their cue from the previous work, but progressively the parked cars which interrupted her pictures or were always present became a subject. Lumpy, obtrusive, blocking the view and somehow also disregarded, she started by making curious hybrids of the front and back ends appearing in the images, then began work on a car itself - the sculpture presented here. Taking the dimensions from a ubiquitously familiar early 90s model, she has built one out of found material. Part cargo-cult totem, part masterful reconfiguring of one thing as something else (I particularly like the way the skis are used, the walking stick wiper and the metre rule) it takes up space in the same kind of brute way that cars do - not much use unless you can move them - an empty space that has somehow become occupied, throwing back at us our own occupation of space. And even, given that we are mobile and it is not, bringing us up against our own mortality.